Scientists have said that they have unearthed a large
wine cellar in the ruined palace of a Canaanite city in northern Israel.
Watch a video of the ruins and hear the scientists explain their
research.
Archaeologists say they have
discovered a 3,700-year-old wine cellar in Israel, a finding that offers
insights into the early roots of winemaking.
The
large wine cellar was unearthed in the ruined palace of a Canaanite
city in northern Israel, called Tel Kabri, not far from the country's
modern wineries. The excavations revealed 40 one-meter-tall (about 3
feet) jars kept in what appeared to be a storage room.
No
liquid contents could have survived the millennia. But an analysis of
organic residue trapped in the pores of the jars suggested that they had
contained wine made from grapes. The ancient tipple was likely sweet,
strong and medicinal—certainly not your average Beaujolais.
"We
were absolutely surprised," said
Eric Cline,
archaeologist at George Washington University and part of the
team involved in the excavation. "We thought we were digging outside the
palace walls when the jars came up."
The findings were presented Friday in
Baltimore at the annual meeting of the American Schools of Oriental
Research. The scientists have yet to publish their discovery in a
peer-reviewed journal; some archaeologists said that made it difficult
to judge the validity of the claims.
The
oldest known wine cellar held about 700 jars and was uncovered in the
tomb of Pharaoh Scorpion I in Egypt, which dates to about 3,000 B.C. But
there were no wild grapes in Egypt, so where did the Egyptians get
their wine? Scientists say they probably imported it from the
Canaanites, a claim bolstered by the recent find.
More than 5,000 years ago, "it was the Canaanites who really developed the winemaking culture and took it to Egypt," said
Patrick McGovern,
an authority on ancient wine at the University of Pennsylvania, who wasn't involved in the Kabri dig.
Later,
the winemakers of Canaan could have taken their expertise northward,
setting the stage for winemaking to develop in Greece, Italy and other
parts of Europe. "The Canaanites had the ships—they took their wine
culture with them," said Dr. McGovern.
Historians
know little about the rulers of Kabri, a town that dates back to 1700
B.C. But they know that a city called Hazor, about 50 miles away, had
contact around this time with Mesopotamia, a region encompassing
modern-day Iraq, and ruled by
Hammurabi.
"The components of the wine match the textual description of wine in Mesopotamia," said Dr. Cline.
The
quest to understand what the ancient wine might have tasted like
required some nifty detective work in the lab. The scientists focused
their efforts on fragments close to the base of the jars, which would
have been in contact with the stored wine and absorbed some of it. They
extracted the organic residues trapped in the pores and analyzed them
chemically.
Andrew Koh,
an archaeological scientist at Brandeis University, said he
discovered the telltale signature of tartaric acid, a key component in
grapes. He also found traces of compounds which suggested that other
ingredients could have been added to the wine, including honey, mint and
herbs.
That is a similar recipe to
that of medicinal wines drunk for 2,000 years in ancient Egypt. The
wines in the Kabri cellar were both white and red, the researchers said.
A
few days before the excavation was wrapped up this summer, the
archaeologists discovered two doors leading out of the wine cellar. If
those lead to other storage rooms with more wine jars, it may be
possible to get an even better fix on what the wine was like. With
enough data, the researchers said, they may even be able to recreate the
flavor of the 3,700-year-old wine.
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